A Fabry-Perot etalon is provided with first and second partially reflecting mirrors (12, 14) attached to a cuboidal spacer (16). The spacer (16) has a cylindrical bore (18) through its center and the mirrors (12, 14) are bonded, on axis, to opposite ends of this bore (18). Four support elements (22-28) are arranged symmetrically with respect to the axis in a tetrahedral configuration and constrain the cuboidal spacer (16) in all degrees of freedom. The cuboidal spacer (16) is flattened at its vertices, which results in modified distortion of the spacer (16) under the action of a compressive force acting through the supports. This structure of etalon provides insensitivity to inertial forces due to acceleration in all six degrees of freedom (three linear and three rotational) simultaneously with insensitivity to differential forces.
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18. A Fabry-Perot etalon including first and second partial mirrors spaced from one another by a spacer element in the shape of a cube, an optical cavity extending between the first and second partial mirrors and having an optical axis, and a plurality of support elements for supporting the spacer element and being located on the spacer element symmetrically about the optical axis of the cavity.
1. A Fabry-Perot etalon including first and second partial mirrors spaced from one another by a spacer element in the shape of a cube, having six sides arranged in three opposed pairs of sides, the two sides of one of the opposed pairs providing support, respectively, for the first and second mirrors; an optical cavity extending between the first and second partial mirrors and having an optical axis; the vertices of the spacer element being truncated.
20. A Fabry-Perot etalon including first and second partial mirrors spaced from one another by a spacer element in the shape of a cube, which spacer element is provided with sides which provide support, respectively, for the first and second mirrors; an optical cavity extending between the first and second partial mirrors and having an optical axis; the vertices of the spacer element being truncated; and a plurality of support elements for supporting the spacer element and being located symmetrically about the optical axis of the cavity.
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This application is the 35 U.S.C. §371 national stage of PCT Application No. PCT/GB2011/051999, entitled “Force-Insensitive Fabry-Perot Etalon” and filed Oct. 14, 2011, which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety and which also claims priority to, and the benefit of, Great Britain patent application 1019152.6, filed Nov. 12, 2010, which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
The present invention relates to a Fabry-Perot etalon and in particular to an assembly which is insensitive to the effects of forces upon which the etalon may be subjected during use, in particular inertial and differential forces.
Fabry-Perot etalons, or interferometers, are used in a variety of applications such as interference filters, telecommunication networks, optical wave meters, laser resonators, for laser absorption spectrometry as well as in astronomy and space applications, in addition to many other uses. In many applications, the etalon must have a structure which is physically solid and stable, to withstand forces to which the etalon may be subjected during use, caused by acceleration, temperature changes and many other effects. If the structure of the etalon is changed, for example if the distance between the mirrors of the etalon is altered or their relative orientation is varied, this has an adverse impact upon the functioning of the etalon, which can result in the generation of erroneous signals or erroneous control which relies upon the performance of the etalon.
The present invention seeks to provide a structure of Fabry-Perot etalon which is insensitive or substantially insensitive to forces to which the etalon may be subjected in practice. In the preferred embodiment, the Fabry-Perot etalon is designed such that its length, therefore frequency, is substantially insensitive to inertial forces due to acceleration in all six degrees of freedom (three linear and three rotational) whilst at the same time being substantially insensitive to differential forces applied to the etalon.
According to an aspect of the present invention, there is provided a Fabry-Perot etalon including first and second partial mirrors spaced from one another by a generally cuboidal spacer element, which spacer element is provided with sides which provide support, respectively, for the first and second mirrors; an optical cavity extending between the first and second partial mirrors and having an optical axis; the vertices of the spacer element being truncated.
This structure of spacer element provides insensitivity to differential forces applied to the etalon.
In the preferred embodiment, there is provided a plurality of support elements for supporting the spacer element and being located symmetrically about the optical axis of the cavity.
This arrangement of support elements can give the etalon insensitivity to inertial forces due to acceleration in all six degrees of freedom (three linear and three rotational). When combined with a cuboidal spacer element as taught herein, the etalon is simultaneously insensitive to inertial and differential forces. These features are considered to provide an etalon with significantly better characteristics than known etalon assemblies.
A compressive force, directed towards the centre of the cavity, is preferably applied at the supports.
There are preferably provided four support elements on the spacer element, arranged in the form of a tetrahedron.
Preferably, the support elements include holding spheres. Advantageously, the generally cuboidal spacer element is provided with flattened contact surfaces at the location of the holding spheres.
The spacer element is preferably formed from ultra-low expansivity glass and the first and second mirror elements are preferably provided on substrates made from silica.
In an embodiment, the etalon includes an annulus, preferably of silica, between each of said mirrors and their associated flattened end of the spacer element.
The annuli assist in making the etalon assembly substantially insensitive to temperature.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a Fabry-Perot etalon including first and second partial mirrors spaced from one another by a generally cuboidal spacer element, an optical cavity extending between the first and second partial mirrors and having an optical axis, and a plurality of support elements for supporting the spacer element and being located on the spacer element symmetrically about the optical axis of the cavity.
This structure of support makes the etalon substantially insensitive to inertial forces due to acceleration in all six degrees of freedom (linear and rotational).
Embodiments of the present invention are described below, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring to
The spacer 16 has in this embodiment three cylindrical bores 18 which extend orthogonally relative to one another and pass through the centre point of the cube to the centre points of their respective faces. One of the bores is obscured by the mirror 12 in
In an embodiment, mirrors are bonded to opposite ends of all three bores to form three orthogonal cavities.
In the preferred embodiment, the spacer 16 is made from ULE and has an edge dimension of 50 mm. The two mirrors 12, 14 are fused-silica mirrors and are optically contacted at opposite ends of the bore 18 which lies along the x-axis. The vertices of the cube are truncated (as shown by reference numeral 25) to a depth of 6.7 mm forming eight plane surfaces normal to the body diagonals of the cube. The mirrors 12, 14 have the following dimensions: outer diameter=12.7 mm; thickness=4.0 mm; radius of curvature of concave surface=500 mm; inner diameter of contacting annulus=8.5 mm. It is to be appreciated that these dimensions are illustrative and not necessarily unique.
Thus, the mirrors 12 and 14 are typically curved, preferably spherically curved. An optical cavity is formed between the inner surfaces of the mirrors 12, 14 and the frequencies of the optical cavity modes are given by
where c is the speed of light, l is the distance between the points at the centres of the two mirror surfaces and N is an integer. Thus the frequency of a cavity mode is defined by the length of the cavity.
It will be appreciated that the length of the optical mode supported by the cavity which is formed by the two mirrors 12, 14 can be approximated as the distance between the centres of the mirror surfaces.
In the preferred embodiment, four supports 22-28 arranged in a tetrahedral configuration constrain the cuboidal spacer 16 in all degrees of freedom (as described in further detail below) and the optical axis is placed symmetrically with respect to these supports. In
Other embodiments may include eight supports each provided at a respective corner bevel or wedge of the spacer 16.
An inertial force due to acceleration acting upon the etalon 10 will cause this to undergo elastic deformation. However, due to the high degree of symmetry, the length, and hence frequency, of the cavity mode is substantially insensitive to inertial forces due to acceleration in all degrees of freedom (linear and rotational).
A second-order sensitivity remains: that due to the inertial force arising from uniform rotation (centrifugal force). Using finite-element analysis, the fractional sensitivity is calculated to be −5.3(+7.6)×10−12 s2 for rotation about the optical axis (about axes perpendicular to the optical axis).
More specifically, an inertial force acting on the etalon 10 causes it to undergo elastic deformation and the points at the centres of the mirrors 12, 14, which define the optical cavity length, are displaced. The modified cavity length is then:
l′=[(u1−u2+l)2+(v1−v2)2+(w1−w1)2]1/2,
where u, v and w are the displacements in the x, y, and z direction respectively at the two mirror centres, denoted by the subscripts 1 and 2. The fractional change in length or frequency is given by:
For the symmetrical arrangement shown in
TABLE 1
inertial force
u1
u2
v1
v2
w1
w2
axial (Tx)
a
a
0
0
0
0
0
transverse (Ty)
0
0
b
b
c
−c
transverse (Tz)
0
0
c
−c
b
b
roll (Rx)
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
pitch (Ry)
0
0
d
d
e
−e
yaw (Rz)
0
0
e
−e
d
d
force/torque
u1
u2
v1
v2
w1
w2
ll
axial (x)
a
a
0
0
0
0
l
0
transverse (y)
0
0
b
b
c
−c
roll (about x)
0
0
0
0
0
0
l
0
pitch (about y)
0
0
d
d
e
−e
yaw (about z)
0
0
e
−e
d
d
Axial force and roll result in no length change. Transverse force, pitch and roll result in equal and opposite transverse displacements at either end of the axis. The fractional length change is proportional to the square of this transverse displacement. The sizes of c and e depend on the material properties and absolute dimensions of the etalon. For an etalon made from ULE (ultra-low expansivity glass; Young's modulus, 67.6 GPa; Poisson ratio, 0.17; density, 2.21 g/cm3) with an edge length of 50 mm, bore radius of 5 mm, mirror radius of 6.35 mm, mirror thickness of 4 mm and truncation at the cube vertices to a depth of 6.7 mm, a finite-element model gives a fractional sensitivity to acceleration (transverse) of order 10−18/ms−2 and a fractional sensitivity to angular acceleration (pitch/yaw) of order 10−19/s−2.
To constrain the etalon 10, a compressive force, directed towards the centre of the cavity, is applied at the supports 22-28 and again this results in elastic deformation. In general, this causes a change in the length and frequency of the cavity mode and one is then sensitive to changes in this applied force. In order to provide insensitivity against such deformation, the cuboidal spacer 16 is truncated at its vertices, the result being a structure in which the length of the cavity mode is made substantially insensitive to compression whilst retaining its insensitivity to inertial force. The principle is illustrated in
For a cube with an edge dimension of 50 mm, the dimensions are preferably as follows: bore radius, 5 mm; mirror radius, 6.35 mm; mirror thickness, 4 mm; cube vertices truncated to a depth of 6.7 mm.
Referring now to
In a practical realisation, frictional forces act at the supports and this means that the cavity is, in fact, constrained in 12 degrees of freedom: six corresponding to rigid-body motion arising from inertial forces and six corresponding to deformation arising from differential forces. For deformations where the supports are forced towards each other in any one of the directions defined by the edges of the cube, the length change on axis is nulled by virtue of the truncated geometry. For deformations where two supports are forced towards each other and two are forced away from each other, the axial displacements at the mirror centres are either zero or cancel out and there is no net length change on axis. Thus, the cavity is insensitive to differential forces in all degrees of freedom.
Table 2 below gives the displacements for the six degrees of freedom corresponding to differential forces that can act on the etalon 10 and the corresponding fractional length changes. The quantities f-i denote displacements and are used to show the symmetries present. The column, Δl/l, uses the leading term in the Taylor expansion of l′. The terms in brackets (D1, D2, etc.) are the labels given to the degrees of freedom as they are shown in
TABLE 2
differential force
u1
u2
v1
v2
w1
w2
axial pinch (D1)
−f
f
0
0
0
0
transverse pinch (D2)
g
−g
0
0
0
0
transverse pinch(D3)
g
−g
0
0
0
0
transverse deformation (D4)
h
h
0
0
0
0
0
axial deformation (D5)
0
0
i
i
0
0
0
axial deformation (D6)
0
0
0
0
i
i
0
In general, the deformations, D1-D3, result in equal and opposite axial displacements at either end of the axis and the fractional length change is proportional to this displacement. However, for the geometry shown in
Compression is, in fact, a special case of differential force and is equal to a sum of the deformations acting along the three orthogonal axes: =D1+D2+D3. It therefore follows that, as the axial displacement is zero for the deformations, D1-D3, for the particular geometry shown in
In an embodiment in which three orthogonal cavities are formed by bonding mirrors to opposite ends of all three bores, a depth of cut at the vertices can be found for which all three cavities are simultaneously insensitive to inertial forces, due to acceleration, and differential forces, in all degrees of freedom.
Referring now to
Referring to
The cuboidal spacer 16 is polished flat so as to have a flat zone 46 at the location of each sphere 41, in a plane normal to the body diagonal centred on the point of contact. This arrangement constrains both displacement and rotation.
The supports 22-28 constrain motion in all six degrees of freedom (displacement and rotation). The etalon 10 is thus mounted on four spheres 41 held within fixed conical housings 42 and these make contact with the spacer 16 at the centre of the polished areas. A compressive force directed towards the centre of the cavity 44 is applied at all the supports 22-28 constrains displacement.
Referring now to
In
The above-described embodiments provide an etalon structure which is stable when fixed, to withstand inertial forces and which is thus substantially insensitive to inertial forces due to acceleration in all degrees of freedom (linear and rotational) as well as to differential forces. The etalon is also stable to temperature variations.
It is to be appreciated that the materials used in the preferred embodiments and the dimensions and proportions of the various elements described in the preferred embodiments may be varied, that is need not be the same as those given in connection with the above-described preferred embodiments.
The disclosures in British patent application number 1019152.6, from which this application claims priority, and in the abstract accompanying this application are incorporated herein by reference.
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